Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Finance (2)
- Banking (1)
- Class (1)
- ClassCrits (1)
- Competition (1)
-
- Contemporary legal theory (1)
- Corporate taxes (1)
- Corporations (1)
- Dodd-Frank (1)
- Economic inequality (1)
- Executive pay (1)
- Income inequality (1)
- JetBlue (1)
- Law and economics (1)
- Law and society (1)
- Markets (1)
- Neoclassical economics (1)
- Neoliberalism (1)
- Taxes (1)
- The Great Recession (1)
- Wage inequality (1)
- Wages (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Finance
. . . And Law?, John Henry Schlegel
. . . And Law?, John Henry Schlegel
Contributions to Books
Published as Chapter 18 in Searching for Contemporary Legal Thought, Justin Desautels-Stein & Christopher Tomlins, eds.
The locution “law and . . . (some other discipline)” implicitly asserts the primacy of legal doctrine and institutions narrowly conceived for coming to understand phenomena in which law takes a part. The ordinary story of American legal theory – formalism then realism then contemporary legal thought – can be understood to repeat the triumphalism implicit in “law and . . .” Of course, the story of American legal theory could possibly be read differently -- as a series of responses to the inability …
Framing Elite Consensus, Ideology And Theory And A Classcrits Response, Athena D. Mutua
Framing Elite Consensus, Ideology And Theory And A Classcrits Response, Athena D. Mutua
Journal Articles
This short paper, really a thought piece, builds upon the examination begun in the Foreword of the ClassCrits VI Symposium which sought to outline a ClassCrits critique of neoclassical economic principles. It argues that neoliberal practices, theory and ideology, built on the scaffold of neoclassical economic ideas, frame an elite consensus that makes elites feel good but which are ethically, intellectually, and structurally problematic for the social well-being of most Americans. It does so, in part, by chronicling a number of recent practices of large corporations, including for example, the practice of inversion. Again, this paper takes as its specific …
Problematique, David A. Westbrook